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CRABCAKES:
A Memoir
by James Alan McPherson. How a Pulitzer
Prize-winning author had to travel to Japan to find
the acceptance and community that he could not find
at home.
PS3557.A355 Z476 1998

DANCING
WITH STRANGERS: A Memoir
by Mel Watkins. Coming of age in the 60s,
this former editor of The New York Times Book
Review grew up in mainstream America and formed
his position on race by reading, not by
marching.
F499.Y8 W38 1998

DEFENDING
THE SPIRIT: A Black Life in America
by Randall Robinson. Autobiography of the founder
and president of Trans-Africa, a lobby organization
dedicated to African and Caribbean issues.
E185.97.R665 A3 1998

*FABRIC
OF DREAMS: Designing My Own Success
by Anthony Mark Hankins with Debbie Markley. At 7
he made a dress for his mother; at 28 he heads his
$40 million clothing company.
TT505.H265 A3 1998

*THE
FLIGHT OF JESSE LEROY BROWN
by Theodore Taylor. Not only did he break racial
barriers; he was also the first Black to fly a Navy
fighter and the first in naval carrier combat.
V63.B75 T39 1998

*FOR
THE LOVE OF GAME: My Story
by Michael Jordan, edited by Mark Vancil. His
career, from game-winning basket in the 1982 finals
to game-winning basket in the 1998 NBA finals. A
lavishly illustrated memoir.
GV884.J67 A28 1998

ELLA
BAKER: Freedom Bound
by Joanne Grant. She worked with the major figures
of labor, civil rights, and peace movements,
not in the front lines but as an organizer
behind-the-scenes.
E185.97.B214 G72 1998

*GIRL
IN THE MIRROR: Three Generations of Black Women in
Motion
by Natasha Tarpley. The poets family
memoir.
PS3570.A6474 G57 1998

HOW
SWEET THE SOUND: My Life with God and
Gospel
by Cissy Houston. A first career as a "preferred
background vocalist" to Aretha Franklin and Dionne
Warwicke; a second career as a "stage mom" to
Whitney.
ML420.H674 A3 1998

I
WILL SURVIVE: The Book
by Gloria Gaynor. How the "Queen of Disco" fought
drugs, alcohol, and bankruptcy for a new life and
career in gospel music.
ML420.G307 A3 1997

INTO
THE TIGERS JAW: Americas First Black
Marine Aviator.
The autobiography of Lt. Gen. Frank E. Petersen
with J. Alfred Phelps. He served in Korea and
Vietnam.
VE25.P48 A3 1998

JOHN
COLTRANE: His Life and Music
by Lewis Porter. A jazz scholar includes
unpublished interviews, photos, and genealogical
documents.
ML419.C645 P65 1998

KING
OF THE WORLD: Muhammad Ali and the Rise of an
American Hero
by David Remnick. "Clay rebelled against everything
and everyone who would keep him and his people
down."
GV1132.A44 R46 1998

*THE
LADY, THE MELODY, & THE WORD: The Inspirational
Story of the First Lady of Gospel.
by Shirley Caesar. Her family, her struggles during
the Civil Rights Movement in North Carolina, and
her career in music and the ministry.
ML420.C175 A3 1998

THE
LIFE AND TIMES OF RON BROWN: A Memoir by His
Daughter.
by Tracey L. Brown. President Clintons
Secretary of Commerce, who was killed in a plane
crash in Croatia.
E840.8.B77 B76 1998

LOOKING
FOR FARRAKHAN
by Florence Hamlish Levinsohn. A political
journalist examines how Eugene Walcott, the West
Indian kid from Boston, became Louis Farrakhan, the
leader of the Nation of Islam.
BP223.Z8 F386 1997

MILITANT
MEDIATOR&emdash;Whitney M. Young, Jr.
by Dennis C. Dickerson. Was the conservative head
of the National Urban League naive in believing his
color would not hinder his rise in the upper
echelons of white political power?
E185.97.Y635 D53 1998

THURGOOD
MARSHALL: American Revolutionary
by Juan Williams. Not the gruff, aloof Supreme
Court Justice but a charismatic, man-about-town who
rejected the teachings of both Malcolm X and Martin
Luther King.
KF8745.M34 W55 1998

TRULY
BLESSED
by Teddy Pendergrass and Patricia Romanowski. How
family and faith in God brought him back from
women, cars, cognac, and cocaine before that near
fatal accident; and afterwards, from depression,
drug abuse, and thoughts of suicide.
ML420.P44 A3 1998

UNAFRAID
OF THE DARK: A Memoir
by Rosemary L. Bray. Having survived childhood with
the help of A.D.C., the writer adds an informed,
compassionate voice to the welfare reform
debate.
F548.9.N4 B73 1998

WITH
OSSIE AND RUBY: In This Life Together.
"We were lucky enough to be born into the Struggle
and from that we have achieved some sense of our
worth as married people, lovers, and friends," say
Davis and Dee.
PN2285 .D28 1998

WALKING
WITH THE WIND: A Memoir of the Movement
by John Lewis. How an Alabama sharecroppers
son joined "the children" and organized the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.
E840.8.L43 A3 1998